(NEW YORK CITY, NEW YORK) Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic Socialist nominee for New York City mayor, said he would move to curb federal immigration enforcement within the five boroughs by ending NYPD cooperation with ICE and resisting deportation operations if elected. Positioning public safety as the primary duty of city police, Mamdani pledged to “fight back” against ICE officers carrying out immigration arrests and deportations in New York City.
The proposal, which he has framed as a shift from current practice under Mayor Eric Adams, would direct local law enforcement to stop assisting federal agents with intelligence, logistics, or operational support that aid immigration enforcement. The plan has drawn strong reactions from across the political spectrum, setting up a high-stakes clash over how far a mayor can go to limit federal deportation activities on city streets.

Legal and practical basis of the proposal
Mamdani’s argument rests on powers he says the mayor’s office already holds over city agencies, especially the NYPD. In his view, the mayor can set clear restrictions on how city officers engage with federal immigration enforcement, halting cooperation that links local policing with deportation.
He contends that this is lawful under city policy and essential to maintaining trust between immigrant communities and municipal government. He has sharply criticized what he describes as the current practice of collaboration, saying the next administration should draw a hard line: the NYPD ensures safety; it does not help remove residents from their homes, jobs, or schools because of federal immigration status.
How the proposal would work in practice
Mamdani’s campaign frames the approach as consistent with sanctuary city principles. The core elements include:
- Ending NYPD cooperation with ICE — no intelligence, logistics, or operational support for deportation actions.
- Refusing to allow city agencies to participate in deportation raids or pass along information enabling federal operations.
- Setting agency-wide rules so local officers, shelter staff, and service centers are not conduits to deportation.
Supporters say withdrawing local support would limit how ICE operates day-to-day, because federal teams often rely on local police for real-time information, access to municipal property, and knowledge of community patterns. The campaign argues this would restore trust and encourage cooperation with police, increasing public safety.
Response to the current administration
Mamdani’s pitch is partly a direct rebuke of the Adams administration. He has criticized Mayor Eric Adams for:
- Moves he says expanded ICE’s reach in municipal spaces.
- Reported plans to open an ICE office on Rikers Island.
- Internal memos critics say give ICE broader latitude in city facilities.
Those actions, critics warn, undermine public trust and push vulnerable residents into the shadows. Mamdani uses that backlash as evidence a course correction is needed—one that separates local services from federal deportation activity.
Political fallout and national attention
The proposal has generated intense political pushback:
- Former President Trump threatened to arrest Mamdani if he obstructs ICE operations and labeled him a “communist,” while also questioning his citizenship.
- Mamdani’s aides emphasize the candidate is not attempting to control federal officers or rewrite federal law; rather, he pledges that city officers will not play a role in deportation actions.
The threat from President Trump highlights how quickly a local immigration policy stance can escalate into a national confrontation if federal officials interpret non-cooperation as interference.
Impact on immigrant communities and public safety
Mamdani and supporters argue the stakes are practical and immediate:
- When residents fear contacting police because of possible immigration checks, public safety suffers.
- Restoring clear boundaries between municipal services and federal immigration enforcement would, they say, rebuild trust and increase cooperation with law enforcement.
- Supporters maintain this is consistent with sanctuary city protections and improves community safety by ensuring 911 calls and reports are not pathways to deportation.
Opponents counter that the plan could be seen as challenging federal authority and making it harder for ICE to detain and remove people subject to federal immigration law.
Operational details and limitations
The campaign addresses several operational questions directly:
- What happens when ICE seeks NYPD help in the field, or requests access to municipal property or records? Mamdani says the answer should be no.
- With local support withdrawn, federal operations would, the campaign argues, have fewer footholds for raids and less visibility into residents’ lives.
- The intent is defensive: without city coordination, federal operations become more difficult—especially in neighborhoods with existing mistrust of law enforcement.
The campaign notes the mayor cannot control ICE, but can control city agencies’ participation. Cutting off intelligence and logistical assistance is presented as a practical lever to make deportation actions harder to plan and execute in New York.
Legal and informational resources
The campaign ties its approach to long-standing sanctuary city ideas and the separation of local and federal roles. For official information on the federal agency at the center of the debate, readers can consult the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement website:
Political analysis and key takeaways
Observers and analysts have distilled Mamdani’s proposal into several central commitments:
- End NYPD cooperation with ICE.
- Resist federal immigration raids and deportations through city policies.
- Uphold and strengthen sanctuary city protections to limit ICE’s operational reach.
Supporters see mayoral leverage over city agencies as sufficient to rebuild trust in neighborhoods fearful of immigration consequences. Critics warn of legal and political pushback and potential federal escalation if local non-cooperation is interpreted as obstruction.
As the campaign continues, the core question is not whether immigration enforcement will remain contentious, but how New York will define the boundaries of its municipal involvement. Mamdani’s pledge to refuse city assistance for deportations and to resist expanding federal enforcement into municipal facilities sets up a clear choice for voters—and a potential clash with federal authorities and political opponents.
Whether New York adopts a stricter sanctuary posture or retains the current approach will shape interactions among residents, local officers, and federal agents — and will continue to attract national attention as the debate unfolds.
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This Article in a Nutshell
Zohran Mamdani proposes that, if elected New York City mayor, he will end NYPD cooperation with ICE by prohibiting intelligence, logistical, and operational support for federal deportation actions. Framed as a sanctuary-city reinforcement, the plan aims to rebuild trust with immigrant communities and reduce fear of contacting police. Supporters say withdrawing local support would hinder ICE operations; opponents warn of legal challenges, federal pushback, and potential national political escalation.